6.3
Shaun and Daz are vibrant kids, wasted by their experience of education. All they have is friendship and Shaun's first love Katy. From the moment Shaun steps into our world he is bound to lose. Labeled as a violent bully he destroys himself and Daz with him. Shaun has twelve years to reflect on an intense summer of love, sex and loyalty. But Daz's imminent death forces Shaun to confront his past.
Robert Carlyle
Shaun
Steve Evets
Daz
Rachael Blake
Katy
Michael Socha
Daniel
Kate Dickie
Janice
Sean Kelly
Shaun as a teenager
Jo Doherty
Daz as a teenager
Joanna Tulej
Katy as a teenager
Matthew Workman
Shaun as a child
Christopher Russell
Daz as a child
Bethan Davies
Katy as a child
Julia Ford
Ann
Deborah Findlay
Doctor Price
George Costigan
Mr. Tanner
Seamus O'Neill
Mr Roberts (Headmaster)
Tim Dantay
Woody (Woodwork Teacher)
Sharon Bower
Mrs Biggs
Colin Tarrant
Mr Biggs
Lauren Socha
Tracey
Michaela Tozer
Zoe
Danny Lane
Len
John Oxborough
Gamekeeper past
Tim Farndon
Gamekeeper present
Emma Farndon
Solicitor's Receptionist
Liz Wilkinson
Norma
Walt Tyzack
Norma's Husband
Stuart Wolfenden
Customer
Brenda Whitmore
Neighbour
Richard Oldham
Man
Clare Kerrigan
Doctor
Richard Jackson
Boy 1
Director
Kenneth Glenaan
Screenplay
Hugh Ellis
Script Consultant
Julie Dixon
August 23, 2019
9
Summer is a stunner!
Every once in a while a fabulous British independent film slips under the radar and is criminally missed by a ream of cinema goers. Summer is one such film. It's directed by Kenneth Glenaan, written by Hugh Ellis and stars Robert Carlyle, Rachael Blake and Steve Evets.
Shaun (Robert Carlyle) and Daz (Steve Evets) were the rouge kids on the block, best friends forever, they were constantly getting into scrapes. Thoughts of education were the furthest thing from their minds. We find Shaun now in adulthood, and now caring for Daz who is crippled and suffering from terminal cirrhosis. From here the film is told through Shaun's eyes with flashbacks to better, vibrant times, in particular the one important summer where Shaun tries to come to terms with life, loves (Blake as the girlfriend Katy) and where fate stepped in to change things. It's through these flashbacks that we learn exactly why Shaun is so devoted to his dying pal.
Structured in the way it is, basically set in three time periods of the protagonists life, Summer involves the viewers to the maximum with the characters. So much so that even with the hanging sense of doom in the air, the nagging question of why is this bond so strong? makes for a fascinating, and emotionally potent experience. The material and its central themes could quite easily been given the sledgehammer treatment by Glenaan, but he directs it in such a subtle way, the final result is all the more emotionally involving. There's no soft soaping either, the plot is tough and realistic, these are real people reacting to real life issues. Something that is helped enormously by the first rate performances of Carlyle (one of his best ever performances) and Evets.
Complementing the acting is Tony Slater-Ling's beautiful photography, particularly in the flashback scenes to the boys youth. The warm glow of the sun, the ripple of the water, the green and pleasant land, each serve as painful reminders to Shaun of his lost youth. Nostalgia is not thought of warmly, it is by definition here, a yearning that gnaws away at his soul. Hugh Ellis' screenplay also deserves plaudits, this may not be the easiest of viewings, since this is after all about wasted life and impending death. But there is always hope in the offering, and coupled with the odd flecks of gallows humour, Ellis has found the right balance for the story. It's downbeat of course, and you may feel like you have been through the mangler come the end. But this really is excellent film making that tells a worthy and most endearing story. With Carlyle magnetic and real and Glenaan serving notice that he's a British director fit to sit alongside Meadows, Loach and Arnold. It's hoped that more people can find and let Summer into their lives. 9/10
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$0.00
Revenue:
$0.00